Thanks for the lesson, Master! If I may, I will express a couple of thoughts. I am listening to your explanation with the help of an online translator and he translated poorly at the very end. Did I understand correctly that after saving to Ps, tiff or psd will return to Lr? Is it still impossible to return the frames processed with new features processed in raw format in this way? If so, it's a little sad. I will be looking forward to the LR update. I have already experimented quite a lot in ACR with the new noise reduction in different images. I liked it more than the noise reduction in Lr and DxO. Master, maybe you made a reservation that ACR creates a new DNG file after noise reduction? It doesn't work for me. Or did I misunderstand something in your explanation? And you also didn't mention the generative extension that you introduced into ACR. For example, with small perspective corrections and small canvas enlargements, very good results can be obtained directly in ACR. Now you don't have to go to Ps for this. I write with the help of an online translator. If we made mistakes with him or translated poorly, please do not judge us strictly.🙂
You are correct. When you transfer back to Lightroom the photo is no longer in a format you can send back to PS/ACR to process with the new features. This week I have been in a meeting with Julieanne Kost. She is the Adobe representative who leads Lightroom/Photoshop education and utilization. I asked her about this and she said that feature will be in Lightroom in the future. Hopefully they will make it more useful to move back and forth from Lr to Ps at that time. Thanks for the comment.
I also didn't really understand why I had to go around in circles to open the processed tiff in LR. I, without logging into PS, from Adobe Bridge using ACR, process with new tools, export to tiff or psd. Then, if necessary, you can export it to LR. Or is the whole trick in the smart object and the ability to return to processing? But so far I haven't seen any difference in saving time. If you explain, I would appreciate it.
You are correct in your explanation. There are a few ways to do the same thing. I was just showing one way for people not familiar with BRIDGE. For some reason Bridge is not used very much in the USA. What ever way works best for you is the way to go. Thanks for the comment
Typically I see this if you have created a smart object , moved it to PS and then launched Camera Raw from the menu instead of double clicking on the thumbnail in the layer panel. Also, what type of file did you create the smart object from? It must be created from a raw file in Lightroom before the denoise feature will work.
First, you would need lightroom, photoshop and adobe camera raw installed on your PC. Well, technically you don’t need lightroom installed, but I am assuming you are trying to reproduce the tip I gave in my last video. In any case you would need at least Photoshop and Adobe camera raw installed. If they are not installed log into your creative cloud application and select these apps for download/install. After they are installed, the easiest way to start ACR is to open PS, choose menu: File> Open and then select a RAW file you wish to process. When the RAW is opened, it will immediately launch ACR so you can process the photo. If you need further instructions, let me know what issues/ questions you have and will provide more help.
Brilliant! Thank you for your time & effort !! 😊
My pleasure! Glad it helped out. Thanks so much for the comment!
Excellent. I was wondering what was going on with those two enhancements when I went to PS
Same here. I am hoping they port them over to LRc in the next interim release. Thanks for the comment.
Nicely done, thank you!
You bet. Hope it helps you out with these new capabilities in Lightroom and ACR. Thanks for the comment.
Thanks for the lesson, Master! If I may, I will express a couple of thoughts. I am listening to your explanation with the help of an online translator and he translated poorly at the very end. Did I understand correctly that after saving to Ps, tiff or psd will return to Lr? Is it still impossible to return the frames processed with new features processed in raw format in this way? If so, it's a little sad. I will be looking forward to the LR update. I have already experimented quite a lot in ACR with the new noise reduction in different images. I liked it more than the noise reduction in Lr and DxO. Master, maybe you made a reservation that ACR creates a new DNG file after noise reduction? It doesn't work for me. Or did I misunderstand something in your explanation? And you also didn't mention the generative extension that you introduced into ACR. For example, with small perspective corrections and small canvas enlargements, very good results can be obtained directly in ACR. Now you don't have to go to Ps for this.
I write with the help of an online translator. If we made mistakes with him or translated poorly, please do not judge us strictly.🙂
You are correct. When you transfer back to Lightroom the photo is no longer in a format you can send back to PS/ACR to process with the new features. This week I have been in a meeting with Julieanne Kost. She is the Adobe representative who leads Lightroom/Photoshop education and utilization. I asked her about this and she said that feature will be in Lightroom in the future. Hopefully they will make it more useful to move back and forth from Lr to Ps at that time.
Thanks for the comment.
I also didn't really understand why I had to go around in circles to open the processed tiff in LR. I, without logging into PS, from Adobe Bridge using ACR, process with new tools, export to tiff or psd. Then, if necessary, you can export it to LR. Or is the whole trick in the smart object and the ability to return to processing? But so far I haven't seen any difference in saving time. If you explain, I would appreciate it.
You are correct in your explanation. There are a few ways to do the same thing. I was just showing one way for people not familiar with BRIDGE. For some reason Bridge is not used very much in the USA. What ever way works best for you is the way to go.
Thanks for the comment
I just tried this technique and am getting the message in Camera Raw that "Denoise cannot currently be applied to smart objects". Any ideas?
Typically I see this if you have created a smart object , moved it to PS and then launched Camera Raw from the menu instead of double clicking on the thumbnail in the layer panel. Also, what type of file did you create the smart object from? It must be created from a raw file in Lightroom before the denoise feature will work.
👏👏🙌
How can I start Camera Raw in Windows 10?
First, you would need lightroom, photoshop and adobe camera raw installed on your PC. Well, technically you don’t need lightroom installed, but I am assuming you are trying to reproduce the tip I gave in my last video. In any case you would need at least Photoshop and Adobe camera raw installed. If they are not installed log into your creative cloud application and select these apps for download/install. After they are installed, the easiest way to start ACR is to open PS, choose menu: File> Open and then select a RAW file you wish to process. When the RAW is opened, it will immediately launch ACR so you can process the photo. If you need further instructions, let me know what issues/ questions you have and will provide more help.
@@easternshorephotoinstruction thank you very much